
.:
San Francisco
Chronicle IV
.: San Francisco Chronicle I
.: San Francisco
Chronicle II
.: San
Francisco Chronicle III
.: SF Weekly
.: Essay by Harry Roche
.:
Essay by Bruce Nixon
.:
Review: San Francisco
Bay Guardian
.:
Artweek
.:
San Diego Union-Tribune
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Portraits
of Energy and Immediacy
by
Kenneth Baker, The San Francisco Chronicle
.:
David Tomb: Ogle: Portrait Drawings
Hackett-Freedman Gallery
San Francisco, CA
The graphic energy of David Tomb's best portrait drawings at Hackett-Freedman
blows away our expectation of psychological depth.
Tomb uses his subjects' appearance to get his hand going, not as inroads to
their character. Visitors leave the show knowing no more than when they arrived
about the people Tomb portrays, likenesses aside.
Collector Robert Shimshak's face resembles Tomb's image of it to a striking
degree, yet it reads like an excuse for the lather of charcoal and gouache
marks that Tomb uncorks to convey Shimshak's legs-crossed posture and patterned
shirt.
Tomb's portraits seem up-to-the-minute not because they show a knowledge of
modern portraitists such as Oskar Kokoschka and Alice Neel, though they do,
but because Tomb looks harder at, and believes more in, the way fabric creases
report the clothed body than at the way faces clothe identity.

Notice how a few deft brush strokes of black over white render the folds in
the black shirt of "J.J." (2003). They report a fleshy torso to
match the subject's face, but also evoke a sort of cladding, like an armadillo
shell, suggestive of some unobvious hardness.
In "Feeling Groovy" (2003) -- the most impressive thing here --
the technique that describes the spaced-out, unnamed sitter conveys his relaxation
more immediately than his slouching pose.
In his treatment of the man's plaid shirt, Tomb flutters a little manifesto celebrating the athletics of hand and eye, as against the supposed intellectual rigor for which the modernist grid stands.
The exhibited portraits' unevenness can make a viewer wonder whether Tomb yet inhabits comfortably the uncompromising artistic posture he has earned.
No matter, he has let his hand go and it will take him there.
.: The San Francisco Chronicle, August, 2003
J.J.
2003
mixed media
44 x 30
by David Tomb
Feeling
Groovy
2003
charcoal, gouache
44 x 30
by David Tomb